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Lazarus effect

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Journal Article
Published: 27 February 2006
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (2006) 43 (1): 23–39.
... probable qu’un refuge unique commun aux brachiopodes de la fin de l’Ordovicien ait existé. Ces taxons se sont plutôt repliés sur divers sites paléogéographiques présentant un éventail d’environnements propices à leur survie. [Traduit par la Rédaction] The Lazarus effect has been manifested...
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First thumbnail for: Global analyses of brachiopod faunas through the O...
Second thumbnail for: Global analyses of brachiopod faunas through the O...
Third thumbnail for: Global analyses of brachiopod faunas through the O...
Journal Article
Published: 01 June 1999
Journal of the Geological Society (1999) 156 (3): 453–456.
...P. B. WIGNALL; M. J. BENTON Abstract Mass extinctions are often followed by intervals in which taxa disappear from the fossil record only to reappear again later. This ‘Lazarus effect’ is often attributed to a poor-quality fossil record or migration to refuges. Testing these alternatives...
Journal Article
Published: 01 December 2012
Bulletin de la Société Géologique de France (2012) 183 (6): 653–660.
... as a Lazarus taxa. Explanations pertaining to the Lazarus effect are examined. 08 04 2012 © 2012 Societe Geologique de France 2012 Geiseltaliellus sp. Au cours de l'Eocène la famille des Iguanidae était relativement diversifiée en Europe de l'Ouest. Avant cette étude, aucun iguanidé...
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First thumbnail for: Presence of iguanid lizards in the European Oligoc...
Second thumbnail for: Presence of iguanid lizards in the European Oligoc...
Third thumbnail for: Presence of iguanid lizards in the European Oligoc...
Journal Article
Published: 01 November 2004
Journal of Paleontology (2004) 78 (6): 1138–1145.
... crisis, but in this case the “Lazarus effect” seems likely to be taphonomic in origin. The name is based on the source of the holotype and only known specimen, the Upper Silurian Bertie Formation in Ontario. Holotype and only known specimen, Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto, Department...
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First thumbnail for: A NEW LATE SILURIAN (PRIDOLIAN) NARAOIID (EUARTHRO...
Second thumbnail for: A NEW LATE SILURIAN (PRIDOLIAN) NARAOIID (EUARTHRO...
Third thumbnail for: A NEW LATE SILURIAN (PRIDOLIAN) NARAOIID (EUARTHRO...
Series: GSA Special Papers
Published: 01 January 1990
DOI: 10.1130/SPE247-p549
... Puercan/Torrejonian transitions suggests percentage survival is similar among the three (55, 48, and 58 percent, respectively) after the Lazarus effect is considered. These results are not easily explained by a catastrophic mass-extinction scenario for the K/T transition, at least for nonmarine...
Journal Article
Journal: Geology
Published: 01 April 1987
Geology (1987) 15 (4): 311–315.
... at the boundary. A major reduction in macrofaunal diversity associated with lithofacies changes occurs prior to but within 300 ka of the nannofossil-defined boundary. Approximately 40% of the apparent faunal reduction is attributed to the “Lazarus effect.” Faunal and floral assemblages, trends in carbon isotopic...
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FIGURE 1—Lazarus taxa and the Simple Completeness Metric (SCM). (A) Theoretical example of the stratigraphic ranges of four taxa (a-d) within six stratigraphic units (1–6). Solid lines indicate the presence (+) of the taxa in the fossil record and dotted lines represent their absence (−), illustrating the Lazarus effect. (B) Calculation of the SCM, the ratio between the number of Lazarus units and the total number of units. The units can be both stratigraphic intervals (rows) or taxonomic groups (columns; after Benton and Storrs, 1996)
Published: 01 April 2000
(−), illustrating the Lazarus effect. (B) Calculation of the SCM, the ratio between the number of Lazarus units and the total number of units. The units can be both stratigraphic intervals (rows) or taxonomic groups (columns; after Benton and Storrs, 1996 )
Image
Figure6—Nektaspid relationships and stratigraphical order of appearance of taxa. Dotted lines emphasize the family Naraoiidae, which is characterized by the loss of thoracic segments (arrow). The new nektaspid supports a putative “Lazarus effect” within the lineage Naraoiidae. The phylogenetic tree is from Figure 5 (see text for details)
Published: 01 November 2004
Figure 6 —Nektaspid relationships and stratigraphical order of appearance of taxa. Dotted lines emphasize the family Naraoiidae, which is characterized by the loss of thoracic segments (arrow). The new nektaspid supports a putative “Lazarus effect” within the lineage Naraoiidae. The phylogenetic
Journal Article
Published: 01 March 2000
Journal of the Geological Society (2000) 157 (2): 511–512.
... to reappear again, apparently unchanged, in younger strata. This disappearance and reappearance is termed the Lazarus effect. Thus, in any particular interval of time a Lazarus taxon is one that is not present in the fossil record, but which we know must have existed by virtue of the presence of older...
Journal Article
Published: 01 January 2002
Journal of the Geological Society (2002) 159 (1): 1–4.
... of species per biozone, then the Lazarus effect may occupy one or more biozones. Suppose it occupied three biozones, and then someone discovered a single record in the middle of the three biozones. Do we then have two shorter Lazarus effects separated by a 'normal' occurrence? Logically one could argue...
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First thumbnail for: <span class="search-highlight">Lazarus</span> taxa...
Second thumbnail for: <span class="search-highlight">Lazarus</span> taxa...
Journal Article
Published: 04 June 2025
Bulletin de la Société Géologique de France (2025) 196 (1): 6.
..., the phyletic discontinuity between some Triassic and Jurassic taxa is also addressed. Some Lazarus taxa known from Triassic and Pliensbachian remain absent in Hettangian and now, at a lesser degree, in Sinemurian. That is why we assume that the absence of these taxa is only due to the poor preservation...
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First thumbnail for: Coral biodiversity from Morocco after the End-Tria...
Second thumbnail for: Coral biodiversity from Morocco after the End-Tria...
Third thumbnail for: Coral biodiversity from Morocco after the End-Tria...
Journal Article
Journal: PALAIOS
Published: 01 April 2000
PALAIOS (2000) 15 (2): 161–165.
... (−), illustrating the Lazarus effect. (B) Calculation of the SCM, the ratio between the number of Lazarus units and the total number of units. The units can be both stratigraphic intervals (rows) or taxonomic groups (columns; after Benton and Storrs, 1996 ) ...
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First thumbnail for: The Fossil Record of Cretaceous Tetrapods
Second thumbnail for: The Fossil Record of Cretaceous Tetrapods
Third thumbnail for: The Fossil Record of Cretaceous Tetrapods
Journal Article
Published: 01 September 2003
Journal of the Geological Society (2003) 160 (5): 815–818.
...- and inter-cladogenic phenotypic variations to at least the generic level. Practical effects would include potential complications for unravelling palaeontological phylogenies, and the recognition of the true status of some so-called Lazarus taxa. Fig. 1.  Examples of functionally sighted and blind...
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First thumbnail for: Some palaeontological implications of putative, lo...
Second thumbnail for: Some palaeontological implications of putative, lo...
Journal Article
Published: 01 September 2018
Journal of Paleontology (2018) 92 (5): 944–945.
..., I am delighted to introduce David Jablonski this evening. For over thirty years, Dave has been one of the most influential scientists in our midst. I’ve been given only five minutes, so I can’t do justice to the wide range of his contributions on topics as diverse as: the effect of larval ecology...
Journal Article
Published: 01 August 1990
Journal of the Geological Society (1990) 147 (4): 663–674.
... and anoxic deep water. Faunal effects include both iterative evolution and intermittently widespread taxa (‘Lazarus taxa’). These predictions agree well with changes observed in well known sequence of Wenlock and Ludlow age, as well as changes seen in selected older and younger sequences. 16 6 1989...
Journal Article
Published: 01 February 2005
Journal of Paleontology (2005) 79 (2): 356–365.
... of stratigraphic distribution of representatives of the family Goniatitidae displays the characteristic expression of the Lazarus Effect. The gap in the record, spanning approximately 10 Ma ( Menning et al., 2000 ), remains problematic. All species of Goniatites have a similar conch morphology...
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First thumbnail for: THE <span class="search-highlight">LAZARUS</span> ...
Second thumbnail for: THE <span class="search-highlight">LAZARUS</span> ...
Third thumbnail for: THE <span class="search-highlight">LAZARUS</span> ...
Journal Article
Journal: Paleobiology
Published: 23 May 2013
Paleobiology (2013) 39 (3): 491–509.
... markers. Finally, we applied the Pacman trimming procedure ( Lazarus et al. 2012 ) to our whole-fauna data set, with several sets of quotas (3%, 5%, and 12% of the abundances for the top of the ranges were trimmed and 1%, 3%, and 8% for the bottom), to study the effect of a possible (respectively...
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First thumbnail for: On the accuracy of paleodiversity reconstructions:...
Second thumbnail for: On the accuracy of paleodiversity reconstructions:...
Third thumbnail for: On the accuracy of paleodiversity reconstructions:...
Journal Article
Journal: Geology
Published: 01 December 2016
Geology (2016) 44 (12): 1051–1054.
...: SQS (shareholder quorum subsampling; Alroy, 2010 ; quota = 0.7), and a linear equation for evenness correction, calculated for each sampled time bin using the D(80) evenness index ( Lazarus et al., 2014 ). The equation’s coefficients are calculated from the effect of actual differences in evenness...
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First thumbnail for: Testing the accuracy of genus-level data to predic...
Second thumbnail for: Testing the accuracy of genus-level data to predic...
Journal Article
Journal: Paleobiology
Published: 01 January 2005
Paleobiology (2005) 31 (2): 269–290.
... the Permian and Middle Triassic but not the Early Triassic (“Lazarus taxa”) do not contribute to observed size increase in the Middle Triassic. Moreover, Lazarus taxa lack large species and exhibit low species richness during both the Permian and the Middle Triassic, suggesting that they survived as small...
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First thumbnail for: Evolutionary dynamics of gastropod size across the...
Second thumbnail for: Evolutionary dynamics of gastropod size across the...
Third thumbnail for: Evolutionary dynamics of gastropod size across the...
Journal Article
Journal: Geology
Published: 01 February 2010
Geology (2010) 38 (2): 147–150.
... and after the P-T mass extinction (e.g., He et al., 2007 ). Hautmann and Nützel (2005) pointed out that the potential Early Triassic size reduction could have contributed to the Lazarus effect; they reported the first Early Triassic heterodont bivalve, Sinbadiella , an unusually small bivalve that had...
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First thumbnail for: Gastropod evidence against the Early Triassic Lill...
Second thumbnail for: Gastropod evidence against the Early Triassic Lill...
Third thumbnail for: Gastropod evidence against the Early Triassic Lill...